Results for ' human finitude and desire'

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  1.  9
    In defence of the desire for everlasting life: why secular faith cannot ground human meaning and solidarity.Roman A. Montero - 2024 - Heythrop Journal 65 (6):662-680.
    In this article, I argue that human meaning and value are grounded in an infinite horizon as opposed to the finite horizon of the building of a life. This infinite grounding of human meaning and value makes sense of and justifies the desire for everlasting life. I also argue that this infinite horizon can motivate an ethic of social justice better than the necessity of building a life within a finite timeframe could. In this article I take (...)
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  2.  6
    Wings of Desire and the Joys of Finitude.Joseph Kupfer - 2025 - Film and Philosophy 29:75-92.
    The film Wings of Desire (Wim Wenders, 1987) begins to answer the startling question, “How could being human be superior to enjoying an angelic existence?” The film’s elevation of ordinary humanity is so persuasive that a few angels forego eternity, “take the plunge,” and become mortals. The first layer of human attraction is found in the uncomplicated pleasures of physical embodiment. To the enjoyment of bodily sensations such as warming our hands on a chilly day, the film (...)
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  3. The Life-Value of Death: Mortality, Finitude, and Meaningful Lives.Jeff Noonan - 2013 - Journal of Philosophy of Life 3 (1):1-23.
    In his seminal reflection on the badness of death, Nagel links it to the permanent loss “of whatever good there is in living.” I will argue, following McMurtry, that “whatever good there is in living” is defined by the life-value of resources, institutions, experiences, and activities. Enjoyed expressions of the human capacities to experience the world, to form relationships, and to act as creative agents are intrinsically life-valuable, the reason why anyone would desire to go on living indefinitely. (...)
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  4.  10
    La puissance de la science comme force, pulsion, désir.Rudolf Bernet - 2017 - Noesis 29:81-99.
    Dans La puissance du rationnel, D. Janicaud retrace la dérive de la rationalité des modernes vers « la rationalité de la puissance » de la techno- science contemporaine. Convoquant d’autres penseurs, l’auteur développe une compréhension complémentaire du projet de la modernité, une caractérisation de la volonté de puissance de la techno-science comme pulsion de mort et une interprétation de la finitude du savoir humain en termes d’un désir de connaitre ancré dans l’expérience d’un manque. Il insiste aussi sur la (...)
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  5.  29
    Human finitude and the concept of women's experience.Tiina Allik - 1993 - Modern Theology 9 (1):67-85.
  6.  93
    Human Finitude and Transcendence: The Heidegger-Cassirer Debate on Kant's Ethics [Research MA thesis, Univ. of Groningen].Mihai Ometiță - 2011 - Dissertation, University of Groningen
    The 1929 confrontation between Heidegger and Cassirer in Davos (Switzerland) is pivotal for the history of the twentieth-century philosophy. The stake of that encounter was the appropriation of Kant’s legacy during the first half of the last century and the fate of Neo-Kantianism between the two World Wars. Since then, the “Davos disputation” has become controversial among researchers of the development of philosophical orientations in the twentieth century. Moreover, not only these researchers, but also the attendants of that dispute, express (...)
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  7.  16
    Human finitude and limits of reason-phenomenological approach to question of irrationality.Mc Dillon - 1977 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 8 (2):94-102.
  8. The Rational Faculty of Desire.T. A. Pendlebury & Jeremy Fix - forthcoming - In Carla Bagnoli & Stefano Bacin (eds.), Reason, Agency and Ethics. Oxford University Press.
    This essay is about the relationship between the notions of practical reason, the will, and choice in Kant’s practical philosophy. Although Kant explicitly identifies practical reason and the will, many interpreters argue that he cannot really mean it on the grounds that unless they are distinct, irrational and, especially, immoral action is impossible. Other readers affirm his identification but distinguish the will from choice on the same basis. We argue that proper attention to Kant’s conception of practical reason as a (...)
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  9.  12
    Ni Foucault ni Lacan. De la Loi, entre éthique et finitude.Thomas Bolmain - 2014 - Meta: Research in Hermeneutics, Phenomenology, and Practical Philosophy 6 (1):198-240.
    After highlighting Foucault’s ambivalent position with regards to psychoanalysis, this paper first shows that Foucault’s critical thought, insofar as it finds its condition of possibility in modern philosophy understood as a theoretical discourse on human finitude, must imperatively be complemented in the vicinity of psychoanalytical praxis-discourse: the ethical and political issue of the finished and desiring subjectivity can thus be examined anew. On the basis of the historicization of the Lacanian Law undertaken in La volonté de savoir, the (...)
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  10.  23
    Too Expensive to Treat? Finitude, Tragedy, and the Neonatal ICU by Charles C. Camosy.Autumn Alcott Ridenour - 2014 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 34 (2):209-211.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Too Expensive to Treat? Finitude, Tragedy, and the Neonatal ICU by Charles C. CamosyAutumn Alcott RidenourReview of Too Expensive to Treat? Finitude, Tragedy, and the Neonatal ICU CHARLES C. CAMOSY Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2010. 208 pp. $18.00In Too Expensive to Treat? Charles Camosy makes an important contribution to bioethics and Christian ethics by making the case for the need to consider social factors when treating (...)
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  11.  12
    The awareness of human finitude and creativity.Pirc Gašper - 2017 - Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 5 (2):185-218.
    In the article, I argue that Gadamer's hermeneutic phenomenology could serve as a basis for the understanding of contemporary social challenges by providing us with pre-requirements for conducting responsible ethics and politics, particularly due to its exposition of awareness of our finiteness, the importance of conversation and the significance of practical wisdom. I also claim that Gadamer's hermeneutics cannot be fully appropriated and that it should be supplemented with the philosophy that is attentive to the ever-present possibility of radical difference (...)
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  12. Human Finitude and History - Prolegomena to the Possibility of a “Philosophy of History” and Ontology of History.Kiraly V. Istvan - 2013 - Philobiblon - Transilvanian Journal Oh Multidisciplinary Research in Humanities 18 (1).
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  13.  67
    The Weight of Love: Augustine on Desire and the Limits of Autonomy.Paul Camacho - 2016 - Dissertation, Ku Leuven
    Augustine developed one of the most profound and influential accounts of love ever offered. Led this way and that by the desires of his famously restless heart, Augustine came to view the experience of desiring as indicating a profound excess to the self. His theory of love has enduring philosophical relevance, not least because it disrupts our prevalent notion of freedom as self-determination. In contrast to our own dominant ethics of autonomy, Augustine argues that true freedom depends upon what exceeds (...)
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  14. Ştefan afloroaei.Experience of Human Finitude - 2012 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 11 (32):155-170.
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  15.  76
    Human Nature and External Desires.Terence Penelhum - 1979 - The Monist 62 (3):304-319.
    When Aristotle said that an action is voluntary if its source lies within the agent rather than outside, he added that an action done from desire or anger is a voluntary one. He dismissed as absurd the suggestion that desire or anger are external forces, and can be classed in consequence as compulsions. In doing this he was rejecting one use of a device whose implications I want to explore in this paper—the device of selecting among the phenomena (...)
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  16.  29
    Technology and human finitude.Andrew Feenberg - 2015 - Revista de Filosofia Aurora 27 (40):245.
    In this text I discuss the fundamental problem of human finitude. This is an issue that comes up in both sources of Western ethical tradition, both the Judaic and the Greek source. The ancient wisdom teaches human finitude and enjoins human beings to avoid hubris, the belief that they are gods. Despite, or rather because of the many advances in technology that have occurred in the past century, we can still draw on this tradition for (...)
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  17.  27
    (1 other version)Mou Zongsan’s Critique of Heidegger’s Interpretation of Kant and his Solution: A Transcultural Discourse on Human Finitude and Infinitude.Taklap Yeung - 2020 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 2020 (5):195-215.
    Mou Zongsan (牟宗三) extols Heidegger’s interpretation of human Dasein as “being-capable” and admits that he was inspired by Heidegger’s interpretation of Kant in many ways; however, although he, like Heidegger, emphasizes that human finitude is the basic premise of Kantian philosophy, he refuses to apply this premise to Kant’s philosophy as a whole. He argues, for Kant, “human beings are finite but can be infinite.” Moreover, he, on the one hand, criticizes Heidegger for withdrawing the dimension (...)
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  18.  14
    Goodness and Infinity: The Meaning of Death and Life in al-Māturīdī and al-Dabūsī’s Metaphysics.Engin Erdem - 2020 - Kader 18 (2):470-487.
    This article aims to analyze the views of two pioneering Ḥanafī scholars, Abū Manṣūr al- Māturīdī and Abū Zayd al-Dabūsī, on the meaning of death and life in terms of their general doctrine of religion. In the first part, the general framework of Māturīdī and Dabūsī’s evidentialist conception of religion are drawn. In the second part, Māturīdī's views on the meaning of death and life and are explored. In the third part, the views of Abū Zayd al-Dabūsī on the meaning (...)
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  19.  18
    Finitude de l'homme et infini de la volonté dans "L'Action".René Virgoulay - 1993 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 49 (3):371 - 384.
    L'infini de la volonté voulante n'exclut pas la finitude de l'homme; il l'accentue plutôt dans la mesure où l'homme est incapable de saturer son désir et de s'achever par lui-même. Cette finitude apparaît comme disproportion ontologique dans l'écart du savoir, du pouvoir et du faire, comme faillite de la volonté voulue dans l'expérience de la faute meurtrière. L'ultime tentative de l'autosuffisance humaine consiste à borner le désir et à l'investir dans un fini absolutisé, comme en témoignage l'action superstitieuse. (...)
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  20.  41
    Hermeneutics and human finitude: toward a theory of ethical understanding.P. Christopher Smith - 1991 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Having thought out the Enlightenment project of individualism, privacy, and autonomy to its end, Anglo-American ethical theory now finds itself unable to respond to the collapse of community in which the practices justified by this project have resulted. In the place of reasonable deliberation about the goals to be chosen and the means to them, we now, it seems, have only what MacIntyre has aptly called “interminable debate” among “rival” positions, debate in which each party merely contends with the others (...)
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  21.  8
    Photography, Finitude, and the Human Self through Time.Ruth Jackson - 2017 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2017 (179):89-107.
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  22.  68
    Prudential Reason in Kant's Anthropology.Patrick Kain - 2003 - In Brian Jacobs & Patrick Kain (eds.), Essays on Kant's Anthropology. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 230--265.
    Within the theory of rational agency found in Kant's anthropology lectures and sketched in the moral philosophy, prudence is the manifestation of a distinctive, nonmoral rational capacity concerned with one's own happiness or well-being. Contrary to influential claims that prudential reasons are mere prima facie or "candidate" reasons, prudence can be seen to be a genuine manifestation of rational agency, involving a distinctive sort of normative authority, an authority distinguishable from and conceptually prior to that of moral norms, though still (...)
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  23.  53
    Transcendence and the Problem of Otherworldly Nihilism: Taylor, Heidegger, Nietzsche.Iain Thomson - 2011 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 54 (2):140-159.
    This paper examines Charles Taylor's case against complete secularization in A Secular Age in the light of Nietzsche's and Heidegger's critiques of the potential for nihilism inherent in different kinds of philosophical appeals to ?transcendence?. The Heideggerian critique of metaphysics as ontotheology suggests that the theoretical pluralism Taylor rightly embraces is more consistently thought of as following from a robust ontological pluralism, and that Taylor's own commitment to ontological monism seems to follow from his own desire to leave room (...)
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  24.  72
    Forgiveness, Freedom, and Human Finitude in Hegel’s The Spirit of Christianity and Its Fate.Theodore George - 2011 - International Philosophical Quarterly 51 (1):39-53.
    The purpose of this essay is to consider the significance that Hegel grants to religious love and, with it, forgiveness in his early The Spirit of Christianity and Its Fate. Although Hegel characterizes religious love in this writing as a unity that transcends reason, his association of such love with forgiveness nevertheless sheds light on an important aspect of human finitude. In this, Hegel may be seen to identify forgiveness as a form of freedom elicited by limits that (...)
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  25.  8
    Introduction: Technology and Human Finitude.Andrew Feenberg - 2017 - In Technosystem: The Social Life of Reason. Harvard University Press. pp. 1-14.
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  26.  23
    Perpetual Peace or War? A Critical Reflection on Kant and the Mahābhārata’s Political Thoughts.Zairu Nisha - 2023 - Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 40 (1):15-34.
    Immanuel Kant, in his political project, “Perpetual Peace” has attempted to show a moral hope for the scourge of humanity, i.e. war. For Kant, man’s intrinsic selfish nature is a cause of constant collision that can be controlled by universal laws of reason to ensure an enduring peace among the warring nations. But is this idealistic approach towards war equally applicable to concrete particular situations of humankind? What if there are conditions under which war becomes inevitable or even a desirable (...)
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  27. Anselm on Human Finitude: A Dialogue with Existentialism.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2014 - Saint Anselm Journal 10 (1).
    The paper discusses Anselm's account of human finitude and freedom through his discussion of what it means to receive what we have from God in De casu diaboli. The essay argues that Anselm is considering the same issue as Jean Paul Sartre in his account of receiving a gift as incompatible with freedom. De casu diaboli takes up this same question, asking about how the finite will can be free, which requires that it have something per se, when (...)
     
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  28.  32
    In the name of human finitude: An examination of Reinhold Niebuhr's Christian realism and political problems.Joseph Margolis - 1956 - Journal of Philosophy 53 (8):276-284.
  29.  26
    Death and Finitude: Toward a Pragmatic Transcendental Anthropology of Human Limits and Mortality.Sami Pihlström - 2016 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book integrates pragmatism and transcendental philosophy in examining the most serious problem defining the human condition, death and mortality. Its analysis of human limits and finitude is intended to be relevant to the concerns of philosophers specializing in, for example, transcendental philosophy, philosophical anthropology, pragmatism, Wittgenstein, and the philosophy of religion. Mortality is studied as providing a necessary framework within which questions concerning the meaningfulness or meaninglessness of human life become possible.
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  30. Reason and Desire After the Fall of Man: A Rereading of Hobbes’s Two Postulates of Human Nature.Kody W. Cooper - 2013 - Hobbes Studies 26 (2):107-129.
  31.  26
    (1 other version)The Sense of the Ending and Human Finitude. Representation of Catastrophe in Cormac McCarthy's “The Road”.Rosanna Castorina - forthcoming - Governare la Paura. Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies.
    This paper, starting from the awareness of the anthropological finitude, aims to investigate the symbolic meaning of the catastrophe in today's society. With reference to E. De Martino’s and G. Anders’s anthropo - philosophical theses, the paper analyzes the representation of present catastrophes as Apocalypses without eskaton , in which the "blindness" of man and his inability to react is manifested. Both technological catastrophes directly caused by man and environmental disasters indirectly produced by anthropic neglect causes a widespread sense (...)
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  32.  13
    Emptiness and desire in the first rule of logic.Jamin Pelkey - 2018 - Sign Systems Studies 46 (4):467-490.
    Charles Sanders Peirce’s first rule of logic (EP 2.48, 1898) identifies the inception point of human inquiry. Taking a closer look at this principle, we find at its core a necessary relationship between emptiness and desire that underlies all genuine instances of human learning and adaptation. This composite relationship plays a critical role in the function or failure of learning but has received scant attention in the literature. As a result, the complexities of the first rule of (...)
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  33.  25
    Critique, Finitude and the Importance of Susceptibility: A Rossian Approach to Interpreting Kant on Pleasure.Jeanine M. Grenberg - 2021 - Philosophia 49 (5):1853-1874.
    In this paper, I take Philip Rossi’s robust interpretation of critique as an interpretive guide for thinking generally about how to interpret Kant’s texts. I reflect first upon what might appear to be a minor technical issue: how best to translate the term Fähigheit when Kant utilizes it in reference to the human experience of pleasure and displeasure. Reflection upon this technical issue will, however, end up being a case study in how important it is when we are interpreting (...)
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  34.  20
    Good, Evil and Human Finitude.Bernard P. Dauenhauer - 1973 - Proceedings of the XVth World Congress of Philosophy 1:143-145.
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  35. What is a Compendium? Parataxis, Hypotaxis, and the Question of the Book.Maxwell Stephen Kennel - 2013 - Continent 3 (1):44-49.
    Writing, the exigency of writing: no longer the writing that has always (through a necessity in no way avoidable) been in the service of the speech or thought that is called idealist (that is to say, moralizing), but rather the writing that through its own slowly liberated force (the aleatory force of absence) seems to devote itself solely to itself as something that remains without identity, and little by little brings forth possibilities that are entirely other: an anonymous, distracted, deferred, (...)
     
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  36. Robot sex and consent: Is consent to sex between a robot and a human conceivable, possible, and desirable?Lily Frank & Sven Nyholm - 2017 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 25 (3):305-323.
    The development of highly humanoid sex robots is on the technological horizon. If sex robots are integrated into the legal community as “electronic persons”, the issue of sexual consent arises, which is essential for legally and morally permissible sexual relations between human persons. This paper explores whether it is conceivable, possible, and desirable that humanoid robots should be designed such that they are capable of consenting to sex. We consider reasons for giving both “no” and “yes” answers to these (...)
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  37.  75
    Heidegger and Korsgaard on Death and Freedom: The Implications for Posthumanism.Hans Pedersen - 2016 - Human Studies 39 (2):269-287.
    Prominent advocates of posthumanism such as Nick Bostrom and Ray Kurzweil make the case that a drastic increase in the human lifespan would be intrinsically good. This question of the value of an extended lifespan has perhaps become more pressing as medical and scientific advances are seemingly bringing us closer and closer to being able to extend our lives in the way posthumanists envision. In this paper I intend to use Martin Heidegger’s work on death and freedom to develop (...)
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  38.  12
    Finitude and theological anthropology: an interdisciplinary exploration into theological dimensions of finitude.Jan-Olav Henriksen - 2011 - Walpole, Mass.: Peeters.
    As finite human beings, we are dependent, limited, situated, and vulnerable, and our understanding of ourselves and the world is constantly facing boundaries and restrictions. This book explores how finitude's different dimensions, and its ambiguities, may be understood within the framework of Christian theological anthropology.
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  39.  67
    Beliefs and Desires: from Attribution to Evaluation.Uku Tooming - 2017 - Philosophia 45 (1):359-369.
    The ability to attribute beliefs and desires is taken by many to be an essential component of human social cognition, enabling us to predict, explain and shape behaviour and other mental states. In this paper, I argue that there are certain basic responses to attributed attitudes which have thus far been overlooked in the study of social cognition, although they underlie many of the moves we make in our social interactions. The claim is that belief and desire attributions (...)
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  40.  22
    Nothingness and Desire: A Philosophical Antiphony.James W. Heisig - 2013 - University of Hawaii Press.
    The six lectures that make up this book were delivered in March 2011 at London University’s School of Oriental and Asian Studies as the Jordan Lectures on Comparative Religion. They revolve around the intersection of two ideas, nothingness and desire, as they apply to a re-examination of the questions of self, God, morality, property, and the East-West philosophical divide. Rather than attempt to harmonize East and West philosophies into a single chorus, Heisig undertakes what he calls a “philosophical antiphony.” (...)
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  41. Disturbing Truth: Art, Finitude, and the Human Sciences in Dilthey.Eric S. Nelson - 2007 - Theory@Buffalo 11:121-142.
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  42.  8
    Matter and desire: an erotic ecology.Andreas Weber - 2017 - White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing.
    Nautilus Award Gold Medal Winner, Ecology & Environment In Matter and Desire, internationally renowned biologist and philosopher Andreas Weber rewrites ecology as a tender practice of forging relationships, of yearning for connections, and of expressing these desires through our bodies. Being alive is an erotic process--constantly transforming the self through contact with others, desiring ever more life. In clever and surprising ways, Weber recognizes that love--the impulse to establish connections, to intermingle, to weave our existence poetically together with that (...)
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  43. Leibniz on Human Finitude, Progress, and Eternal Recurrence: The Argument of the ‘Apokatastasis’ Essay Drafts and Related Texts.David Forman - 2018 - Oxford Studies in Early Modern Philosophy 8:225-270.
    The ancient doctrine of the eternal return of the same embodies a thoroughgoing rejection of the hope that the future world will be better than the present. For this reason, it might seem surprising that Leibniz constructs an argument for a version of the doctrine. He concludes in one text that in the far distant future he himself ‘would be living in a city called Hannover located on the Leine river, occupied with the history of Brunswick, and writing letters to (...)
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  44.  8
    Having some regard for human frailty : on finitude and humanity.Katherine Withy - 2022 - In Ingo Farin & Jeff Malpas (eds.), Heidegger and the human. Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. 307-324.
    As Heidegger presents it in the existential analytic in Being and Time, the primary challenge of being the sort of entity that we are is having the right sort of regard for our frailty. We usually think of human frailties as arising from the vulnerabilities of the body – to injury, sickness, debility, and death. But, for Heidegger, our frailty is not tied to our embodiment, since we are not essentially bodies but instead cases of Dasein, the entity that (...)
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  45. Human Flourishing Versus Desire Satisfaction.Richard J. Arneson - 1999 - Social Philosophy and Policy 16 (1):113-142.
    What is the good for human persons? If I am trying to lead the best possible life I could lead, not the morally best life, but the life that is best for me, what exactly am I seeking?This phrasing of the question I will be pursuing may sound tendentious, so some explanation is needed. What is good for one person, we ordinarily suppose, can conflict with what is good for other persons and with what is required by morality. A (...)
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  46.  25
    Hermeneutics and Human Finitude[REVIEW]Quentin Lauer - 1992 - International Philosophical Quarterly 32 (3):390-391.
  47. Heidegger’s Nietzsche, the Doctrine of Eternal Return, and the Phenomenology of Human Finitude.Robert D. Stolorow - 2010 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 41 (1):106-114.
    Nietzsche’s doctrine of the eternal return of the same, seen through the lens of Heidegger’s interpretation, captures the groundlessness of existence in a technological world devoid of normative significance. The author contends that the temporality depicted poetically in the thought of eternal return is the traumatic temporality of human finitude, to which Nietzsche was exposed at the age of 4 when the death of his father shattered his world. Nietzsche’s metaphysical position is seen as a metaphorical window into (...)
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  48.  1
    Seeking the dereified imaginary: the desire in mind as a source of the self in the eroticism of Georges Bataille.Andreas Papanikolaou - forthcoming - Journal for Cultural Research:1-15.
    The crucial stake of the present paper lies in the dereification of the human being, in the abrogation of the psychological, ethical homogeneity, and the objectified sociocultural representations of the imaginary. The imaginary can be conceived not only as a term able to confirm the mental structures of the subject that constitute the identity and bounds of human thought, but also as the way in which ethical norms become manifest. Norms, which through their internalisation dictate the perception of (...)
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  49.  15
    The bonding of will and desire.Joanne Stroud - 1994 - New York: Continuum.
    "Over many centuries, philosophers, theologians, and poets have been fascinated by the interplay of will and desire in the human psyche. Does will follow or precede desire? How can we bond them and thus unite body, soul, and spirit in harmonic concord? For fresh insights to these age-old questions, Dr. Joanne Stroud enlists the tools of modern psychology. Her eclectic probe of basic human drives moves from the awesome power of Eros, the great liberator of antiquity, (...)
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  50. Human Enhancement and the Computational Metaphor.James Ogilvy - 2011 - Journal of Evolution and Technology 22 (1):81-96.
    This paper affirms human enhancement in principle, but questions the inordinate attention paid to two particular forms of enhancement: life extension and raising IQ. The argument is not about whether these enhancements are possible or not; instead, I question the aspirations behind the denial of death and the stress on one particular type of intelligence: the logico-analytic. Death is a form of finitude, and finitude is a crucially defining part of human life. As for intelligence, Howard (...)
     
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